Skip Navigation LinksHome > Financial Aid > College Scholarships > Scholarships by Major > Engineering Scholarships > Furman University Alden Pre-Engineering Scholarship

Furman University Alden Pre-Engineering Scholarship

This scholarship is available to enrolling freshmen at Furman University who plan to pursue a pre-engineering program combining three years of study at Furman with two years at Auburn, Clemson, University of Georgia, Georgia Tech, North Carolina State, or the University of North Carolina. This full-tuition scholarship will be awarded on the basis of
merit and is renewable for three years. It is offered through a generous endowment from the George I. Alden Trust of Worcester, Massachusetts. The Alden Scholarship will be selected by a Furman faculty committee. Applicants must apply for admission; scholarship applications must be postmarked by January 15th to Furman's Office of Admissions. The winner will be notified by April 1st.

To download the application, please visit our website.

Engineering Scholarships

Latest College & Financial Aid News

Staying Sharp Over the Summer

by Kara Coleman, Scholarships.com Virtual Intern Thousands of college students across the country have been making their way home from school to spend the summer relaxing and taking a break from studying. But how do you keep from forgetting everything you’ve learned throughout the academic year? Here are a few simple tips: Rack up the credit hours. The most obvious way to keep your study [...]

Confessions of a College Graduate

by Jessica Seals, Scholarships.com Virtual Intern After my high school graduation, I could not wait to start attending college and gain more life experience by being out on my own. Before I graduated from college, however, I heavily anticipated the break that I would be taking before I began law school. I dreamed about all of the extra rest that I would be getting and became even more [...]

Study U

The average college student has lots of free time on his or her hands but add in part-time jobs, internships, group work and even commuting and those hours disappear fast. Time spent studying has dipped from 24 hours to 15 hours per week since the 1960s but according to the Washington Post and the National Survey of Student Engagement, students still make ample time and they’ve listed five [...]

Follow Us:

facebook twitter rss feed